

SCREEN
That’s So Wednesday Our favorite goth girl returns
with a new murder mystery.
BY KRISTIAN LIN
Of course, Wednesday Addams was my feral spirit animal when Jenna Ortega was just a gleam in her father’s eye. During my childhood, when my local network affiliate filled afternoons with reruns of old TV shows, I spent summer days watching the 1960s version of The Addams Family and basking in the weirdness of the clan that played together with high explosives. So, I was on tenterhooks to see Netflix’s Wednesday, which focused on the eldest Addams kid. Sadly, my film-criticism duties prevented me from catching the first season until it had already become the talk of TV fans, but now Season 2 arrives during the doldrums of summer to make me feel like I’m 10 years old again.
Except it’s better, because this Wednesday Addams is older and more developed as a character. Maybe Ortega doesn’t have the last ounce of pure creepiness that Christina Ricci (who’s in this show, too) brought to the character in the 1990s Addams Family movies. Ortega has nevertheless struck a chord with a new generation of fans, playing Wednesday Addams as a polyglot, cel lo-playing, kung fu-kicking, colonialism-bashing goth girl who faces down the scariest monsters with expressionless sangfroid and then dances

like nobody is watching. In the pantheon of sociopathic TV antiheroes, I’ll take her over Tony Soprano, Walter White, or Tommy Shelby. She’s less obsessed with money and power and consequently a lot more fun.
The second season has her returning to Nevermore Academy, this time with her younger brother Pugsley (Isaac Ordonez) as an incoming freshman. After saving the school in the first season, she is now horrified to find that she is a campus celebrity, with the uncool new principal (Steve Buscemi) commissioning bad art to commemorate her heroism. Fortunately, there’s better news: Someone is sending her threatening notes and luring her into traps meant to kill her, and a murder of crows is murdering the citizens of the nearby town, including the disgraced former sheriff (Jamie McShane). Wednesday needs to save her best friend and roommate Enid Sinclair
WATERING YOUR LAWN IS
EASY AS
When it’s time to water your lawn, think 1, 2…zero. Once a week if it needs a little water. Twice a week if it’s dry and hot. Zero if it’s been raining. Make sure your sprinklers aren’t leaking or pointing the wrong way. And try drip irrigation for flowers and shrubs. Visit Water is Awesome.com for more tips.

I would point out one more thing that’s different: Both Pugsley and her apiculturist fellow student Eugene (Moosa Mostafa) have grown much taller than her. As happened with Stranger Things, Netflix took so long between seasons that puberty noticeably kicked in with the young actors. Where the first season gave the main character an uninteresting love triangle with two boys, this one ventures into more fruitful territory by placing Wednesday in more contact with her family. Pugsley has his sister’s heedless bravery without her intelligence and gets into trouble as a result. With Morticia (Catherine Zeta-Jones) spending more time at Nevermore’s campus as the new fundraising chair for the financially strapped school, Wednesday’s difficult relationship with her mother becomes clearer. Fred Armisen is more secure in the role of Uncle Fester as well, and it’s a particularly inspired touch that Wednesday’s being stalked by a crazed 13-year-old fangirl (Evie Templeton) who can turn invisible.
Unfortunately, all this comes rather at the expense of the guest stars who’ve climbed aboard this successful show. Haley Joel Osment pops in a
role (as a doll-obsessed serial killer) that’s meant to be a black joke and nothing more, but Buscemi is surely overqualified to portray the petty manipulator that his character has been so far. The same goes for Thandie Newton as the director of the local insane asylum and Billie Piper as Nevermore’s new music teacher.
Possibly some of these issues will be addressed in the second batch of this season’s episodes, which drops on September 3 — a Wednesday, of course. For now, it’s enough that showrunners Alfred Gough and Miles Millar keep their eye on their title character’s shortcomings amid her badassery and surround her with people equipped to deal with her crap. The first half of the season ends with Wednesday not only getting badly hurt trying to intervene but accidentally freeing all the inmates from the asylum, including the ex-boyfriend (Hunter Doohan) who wants to kill her and Enid. How she gets out of this pickle remains to be seen, but I’ll be spending August waiting for the resolution, accompanied by Ortega’s invigorating disdain for the foolishness of lesser mortals. l
WATER IS AWESOME.COM



Jenna Ortega customizes her airhorn to match her outfit on Wednesday.
Moneyball College and professional football have officially swapped places.
BY BUCK D. ELLIOTT
Growing up a pro football fan in the Metroplex was magical in the ’90s. The Dallas Cowboys were the platinum standard for gridiron excellence, and Warren Moon’s Houston Oilers — though oft mediocre — offered a fun alternative if you were bored of America’s Team winning all the time. College football was the opposite. SMU was in postmortem reconstruction from the NCAA’s death penalty, and TCU was middling bordering on irrelevant. I sported a white Emmitt Smith and blue Troy Aikman jersey on alternating days — can’t even recall another article of clothing from 1991 to 1994.
Then something happened the Cowboys never seemed to recover from: the salary cap. The collective bargaining agreement would successfully keep more money in NFL owners’ pockets and try to temper the domination of just a few teams. Shortly after, the Frogs and Mustangs found themselves excluded from the Big 12 after the formerly prominent Southwest Conference disbanded in 1995. TCU and SMU dropped to mid-major status in the Western Athletics Conference (WAC), an all-too-appropriate name for their new station.
For the next 25 years, the professional and collegiate games mirrored similar financial restrictions and careful resource management. Sure, athletes found ways to make money at university, but it was always don’t ask/don’t tell. The jaw-dropping spending came in the form of the arms race of athletic facilities to attract the best recruits. Now, it’s all basically for naught. House v. NCAA now says colleges can revenue-share

more than $20 million per year with their athletes. Alongside what amount to venture-capital funds for Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL), we’ve entered what could be considered the college football cold war — outspend your enemy, even if you never fire a single shot.
Rankings and projections are starting and, rightfully so, are influenced by what each school is shelling out for their roster, which for most teams is shifting substantially every season. No longer do pundits and analysts have any earthly idea how good a team will be. They never really did (except yours truly, of course). But the incredible shifting of rosters and money-bombing of top recruits have turned collegiate football into a race of which school can shovel money into the fire the quickest. What will teams achieve for this incredible expense? Well, that remains to be seen. My instinct says not much. Previously, the big money was
levied at high-profile coaches and eye-popping facilities. Almost every competitive college boasts weight and recovery rooms that would make most Olympic training centers seem like prison yards, but most schools have not turned former winning into current success. Texas A&M comes to mind. Only two years ago, the Ags paid former coach Jimbo Fisher almost $78 million to seek employment elsewhere. The College Stationites spend as much or more than any other program and don’t have any hardware to show for it.
Currently, the Big 12 team to watch is Texas Tech, whose NIL collective is one of the most aggressive and well-funded in the country. The Matador Club paid NiJaree Canady — one of the best softball pitchers in the country — $1 million to transfer from Stanford (the largest NIL deal for a college softball player — ever) and turned the acquisition into a College Softball World
Series appearance. Current estimates are that Tech will pay their footballers around $28 million this season, and their preseason ranking (23) is a reflection of that.
Locally, the Tennessee Volunteers attempted to lure TCU’s starting quarterback Josh Hoover from Fort Worth during the offseason. Hoover, who reportedly makes more than $1 million with the Frogs, turned down an offer from the Rocky Toppers for at least an additional million. And the Texas Longhorns are ranked No. 1 in the preseason poll, anticipating a roster spend between $35-40 million.
My most pressing concern is how this all feels, which can only be described properly as “ick.” I was fairly transparent that I thought college athletes should be entitled to compensation since their bodies and careers are the ones on the line, but players taking pay cuts on rookie contracts in the NFL just feels wrong. Combine that with the proliferation of players transferring en masse every single year, and the game is but a shadow from the early aughts, when there was still a tacit suggestion that these athletes were cosplaying as students and peers to their universities’ nonathletes in some way. It all gives a third-marriage vibe. The passion might be there somewhere, but it’s an afterthought compared to retirement accounts and liquid assets.
So far, NIL doesn’t seem to have affected on-field results in any concrete way. Teams that have been dominant still are, and the normal flux of teams on the precipice midseason, as well as the occasional surprise, seems within the margin of error to which we’ve become accustomed as fans. You can wager with good conscience that teams won’t find the level of success by simply paying more for players that Red Raider softball enjoyed with their pitching acquisition last season. Football is simply too complex and dynamic a game for one player, or even a group of players, to make that kind of a difference. Sure, there are outstanding game changers, but supporting pieces and coaching schemes make a more substantial difference in football than in other sports. You need look no further than the NFL to see teams completely whiff on draft picks and pay huge extensions to players that amount to no more wins than previous average seasons. There are simply too many factors to accurately predict how a team and their dynamic will evolve simply based on how that athlete played in a different season, on another team, or at a different level. In many ways, offering huge money — especially to high school players — might be the worst investment college football programs can make, but, hey, my portfolio is still half GameStop, so what do I know? l

Unlike other sports, one or two big-moneyed football players can’t make much of a difference on the field.
Courtesy Ideogram.com

Ate Days of Culinary Contests: Seasonal Themes, Ice Cream, and (No) Screams
Several culinary-oriented contests and events are afoot — including one of ours — with fun, seasonal themes. From the Weekly’s annual Best Of season to the State Fair and Halloween, there are many ways to celebrate with food and booze. Let’s start with yours truly.
Best Of 2025: The Ballot Is Open
Now thru Fri, Sep 12, make your voice heard by participating in our online-only write-in ballot to determine the Readers’ Choice winners in the five sections: Getting & Spending, People & Places, Arts & Culture, Good Grub, and On the Town Plus, help us decide which local bands will make the cut for our upcoming Music Awards by also making choices in the Music Awards Nominations section.
The food categories in the Good Grub section include Bakery, Barbecue, Breakfast, Brunch, Burger, Burrito, Cajun Food, Catfish, Chef, Chicken-Fried Steak, Chinese Food, Coffeeshop, Deli Sandwiches, Empanadas, Food Truck, Fried Chicken, Hot Dog, Italian Food, Japanese Food, Korean Food, Mediterranean Food, Mexican Food, Pizza, Plant-Based Dish, Queso, Ramen, Restaurant, New Restaurant, Salsa, Seafood, Soul Food, Steak, Street Tacos, Sushi, Tamales, Tex-Mex Food, Thai Food, Vietnamese Food, Waitstaff, and Wings, Plus, every section, including this one, has a Wildcard category in case we forgot something.
Booze categories under On the Town include Bar-Bar, Bartender, Beer Selection, Brewery, Place to See Comedy, Craft Cocktail, Place to Dance, Distillery, Dog-Friendly Patio, Drag Show, Happy Hour, Hotel Bar, Karaoke Night, Late-Night Food, LBGTQIA+ Bar, Margarita, Martini, Mixologist, Patio, Restaurant Bar, Sports Bar, Place to Drink Wine, and Wildcard.
Go to FWWeekly.com and search for Steal This Art, and you’ll find an article that outlines every category and includes art that businesses can save to help them promote the vote (and the rules for doing so). The ballot itself is at FWWeekly. com/Best-Of-2025-Ballot.
All’s Fair in Love & Fried Food Since 2005, the State Fair of Texas has been hosting its Big Tex Choice Awards in the months prior to the event to showcase the season’s best new food creations. Everything from fried beer to fried peaches and cream has joined the exclusive club of fried food creations. This year, the fair has added an award for drinks, so the three categories are Savory, Sweet, and Sippers.
Among the finalists that includes Crab & Mozzarella Arancini, Deep Fried Deli Tacos,


brisket sandwich and potato leek soup — slowcooked chopped beef brisket served on a Brioche bun with loaded potato salad and homemade baked beans. To see the full menu, visit StageWest. org/cafe. Reservations are recommended. Email BoxOffice@StageWest.org or call the theater. Arrival time for dinner is 6-6:30pm. The performance begins at 7:30pm. Arrive for Saturday lunch or Sunday brunch between 12:30pm and 1pm with the matinee beginning at 2pm.
the Vietnamese Crunch Dog, and Wagyu Bacon Cheeseburger Deviled Egg Sliders, the Brisket & Brew Stuffed Pretzels by Glen and Sherri Kusak caught my eye. Slow-smoked brisket is blended with a bold, velvety beer cheese made from sharp cheddar and a hearty brew. Then, it’s all wrapped up in soft, chewy pretzel dough, hand-rolled, sprinkled with sea salt, and baked until crispy on the outside and gooey in the middle. They are served with your choice of spicy mustard or tangy barbecue sauce.
Candy Lemon Sour Face, the Chill & Thrill Delight, Dubai Chocolate Cheesecake, Rousso’s Dubai Chocolate Funnel Cake Fries, and Tex’s Toast a la Mode are the five finalists in the Sweet category. They had me at “funnel cake,” plus I’ve been wanting to try Dubai Chocolate. Rousso’s Dubai Chocolate Funnel Cake Fries are made by frying funnel cake strips until golden brown, then drizzling them with warm Belgian chocolate, topping them with pistachio cream, and adding delicate pieces of knafeh pastry. Yum!
In the inaugural Sippers category, finalists include the Coconut Quadruple, a Cookie Chaos
Milkshake, Hot Honeycomb Lemonade Shake Up, Nevins Dirty Red Bull Tex-Arita, and the Poppin’ Boba Rita. Honestly, anything with “’Rita” on the end sounds refreshing. But the Coconut Quadruple, made by Binh Tran and My Volooks, is the perfect dessert drink for me. A whole, young coconut is served with an ice-cold, freshly made coconut slushy topped with soft-serve coconut ice cream and a sprinkling of coconut flakes. I’m in!
Eats Meets Arts
Stage West Theatre (821 W Vickery Blvd, Fort Worth, 817-784-9378) is presenting a Pulitzer Prize-winning play this month and next. From Fri, Aug 28, thru Sun, Sep 14, James Ijames’ Fat Ham retells Shakespeare’s Hamlet with a queer, Black twist, when a young man in a Southern family is visited by the ghost of his father at a backyard barbecue and is asked to seek revenge. Tickets are $38 at StageWest.org/Fat-Ham.
When you see Fat Ham, you’ll also want to make a reservation for pre-performance dining in the Lobby Cafe. If you’re attending Thu-Sat, you can get into the spirit with a barbecue chopped

Spoiler alert: Our film guy wasn’t a big fan of the Freakier Friday sequel that just came out, but he did enjoy the nostalgic part when Anna (Lindsay Lohan) reunites with her ex-bandmates (Christina Vidal, Mitchell, and Haley Hudson) and performs songs from the first movie. (Read more of his thoughts at FWWeekly.com in Film Shorts.) If you don’t care and you’re seeing it anyway, make it a theme night and go to any PF Chang’s in North Texas — including their newest location in Alliance Town Center (2949 Amador Dr, Fort Worth, 817-484-5025) for PF Chang’s Freakier Friday contest. One lucky grand prize winner will have a Freakier Year and will receive a Disney Freakier Friday Prize Pack that includes a year of dinner specials and movie tickets, valued at $2,600 and $2,080, respectively. Ten other people will win a runner-up prize of a $150 gift card to PF Chang’s and two movie tickets. Dine-in customers can enter by scanning a QR code on the menu, then ordering a Freakier Friday Color-Changing Refresher by Tue, Sep 2.
Goodbye, Screams — Hello, Scarborough’s Hollow
Located on the grounds of Scarborough Renaissance Festival (I-35 at FM 66, Waxahachie, 972-938-3247), Screams Halloween Park has been open during Halloween for the past 28 years. It was announced last winter that the 2024 season was its last. This fall, it’s set to reopen with a new concept called Scarborough’s Hollow: A Fall Fantasy Festival. It’s open 2pm-10pm Saturdays from Oct 11 to Nov 15 (plus Halloween night 5pm-midnight) for “an unforgettable interactive journey through the enchanted Scarborough’s Hollow transformed by three fairy sisters and filled with magic, mischief, and autumn wonder.” There will still be at least one haunted house to check out, but there will also be artisan shoppes, a fun house, live entertainment, a petting zoo, and promises of seasonal fun with a touch of spooky delight.
If beer is your autumn indulgence, add on a $39 tasting experience ticket for Brews of the Hollow Tasting led by Scarborough’s own certified cicerone, Seamus Norwood. He’ll guide you through how to truly taste beer, share how
continued on page 17
Rousso’s Dubai Chocolate Funnel Cake Fries are one of five finalists in the Sweet category in this year’s Big Tex Choice Awards at the State Fair.
Courtesy State Fair of Texas
With Fat Ham, Stage West offers a modern, queer, Black, Southern retelling of Hamlet But first, dinner.
Courtesy Stage West
Scarborough’s Hollow has six pubs and taverns throughout the grounds, serving beer, wine, and the ever-popular mead.
it’s crafted, pair it with light bites, and weave in fascinating (and sometimes cheeky) stories from beer’s rich past. Seamus brings his signature mix of humor and expertise to the pavilion near Taboo Tavern at 4pm and 7pm every Saturday, plus 7pm and 9pm on Halloween night. Each guest will enjoy a tasting flight and take home a commemorative souvenir glass.
The usual ren fair foods will be available for purchase, but there will also be an interactive s’mores station. For those 21 and older, Scarborough’s Hollow has six pubs and taverns throughout the grounds, serving beer, wine, and the ever-popular mead varieties, Breaking Brew and Nidhoggr. Also look for weekly specials and seasonal drinks at the Headless Horseman, Jack O’ Lantern, Hogshead, Dragon’s Lair, Red Lion, and Taboo Tavern (a full-service bar).
Tickets start at $17 for adults and $6 for kids. For tickets and times, activity reservations, and add-ons, visit SRFestival.com/hollow.
Sweets as a Team Sport Division Brewing (506 E Main St, Arlington, 682259-7011) is celebrating the back-to-school season with an old-fashioned Ice Cream Social from 1pm to 4pm Sat, Aug 23. Contestants will vie for the title of Best Hand-Cranked Ice Cream, and everyone gets to sample and vote for free. All educators will receive discounts on food and drinks. If you’d like to compete, email Wade@DivisionBrewing. com for details.


dipped in blueberry-flavored icing, topped with sprinkles). Each donut is adorned with the appropriate house crest.
Still unsure which house you belong to? No worries. Let the Sorting Hat donut decide. Each is a donut filled with a mystery-colored Kreme representing one of the four Hogwarts Houses, then dipped in chocolate-flavored icing, sprinkled with shimmering gold stars and gold sugar, and topped with the Sorting Hat piece. Take a bite to see which house you’re in.
On Sat, Aug 23, Krispy Kreme is hosting a special Houses of Hogwarts Day. Participating shops nationwide will give any fan who reps their favorite house one free Original Glazed donut, no purchase necessary, while supplies last.
Meanwhile, Krispy Kreme is celebrating the start of school with a limited-time Harry Potter promotion. Participating Krispy Kreme shops across the country are offering new donuts that bring the houses of Hogwarts to life through four delicious flavors: the Gryffindor (an unglazed shell donut filled with cookie butter-flavored cream, dipped in red icing and Biscoff cookie crumble, topped with golden icing drizzles); the Slytherin (an Original Glazed donut topped with chocolate and green buttercream-flavored swirls, chocolate cookie sugar blend); the Hufflepuff (an unglazed shell donut filled with brown butter toffee-flavored custard, dipped in golden yellow icing, topped with black chocolate drizzle and cookie crunch); and the Ravenclaw (an Original Glazed donut
Then, beginning Mon, Sep 1, Krispy Kreme will give fans a chance to win a trip to either Universal Studios Hollywood or Universal Orlando Resort to experience The Wizarding World of Harry Potter. For more information, visit KrispyKreme.com/ promos/harry-potter/giveaway. l
By Elaine Wilder



Contestants will vie for the title of Best Hand-Cranked Ice Cream at the annual Ice Cream Social at Division Brewing this Saturday.
Experience the wizarding world of Harry Potter through donuts this month.
Krispy

March 2–September 7

Alex Da Corte: The Whale is made
with
Henrik Persson, Gió Marconi
and Sadie Coles HQ.
The Pied Piper 2019. Neoprene, EPS foam, upholstery foam, staples, thread, polyester fiber, epoxy clay, MDF, plywood. 120 × 120 × 6.5 inches. Courtesy Sadie Coles HQ, London. © Alex Da Corte. Image: Karma
NIGHT & DAY
817 Day, Back to School, and Burger Week are All on the Horizon
Gay for Good, a nonprofit that mobilizes LGBTQ+ people and their allies to promote diversity and inclusion in the broader community, is hosting an event at Tarrant Area Food Bank (200 Cullen St, Fort Worth, 817-857-7100). From 9am to noon, volunteers will assist with quality control, food safety, and packing food. To participate, you must be 14+ (19 and under must be accompanied by an adult) and wear comfortable work clothes and close-toed shoes. Register now at GayforGood.org/volunteer.
Dallasite James Heath — a.k.a. the Reverend Horton Heat, a.k.a. the godfather of modern rockabilly and psychobilly — is

bringing his trio to Fort Worth for a rare appearance on our side of town. At Tulips FTW (112 St. Louis Av, Fort Worth, 817-367-9798), Parts Unknown will open at 7pm. Tickets start at $32.88 at TulipsFTW.com.
Celebrate National Aviation Day at — where else? — the Fort Worth Aviation Museum (3300 Ross Av, Fort Worth, 855-733-8627). From 10am to 2pm, enjoy open cockpits, WWII Jeep rides, flight simulators, games, crafts, and more. Kona Ice

Flying Saucer Draught Emporium (111 E 3rd St, Fort Worth, 817-336-7470). Starting at 6pm, this Sundance Square taproom is hosting live music by Crossfire Serenade, plus doing giveaways, raffles, and special beer releases from False Idol, Martin House, Rahr & Sons, and Turning Point breweries.
Turning Point Beer (@ TurningPointBeer) will serve its True Texan variety as part of the Back to School event at Social House (840 Currie St, Fort Worth, 817-820-110). This street festival from 11am to 5pm is a school-supplies drive benefiting the schools in Kerr County affected by the July floods. Steve Helms will perform 3pm5pm. Other vendors include Funnel of Love (@FunnelofLoveDFW), Salmark BBQ (@ SalmarkBBQ), Teatro Cafe (@TeatroCafe_), and Texas Best Ice (@Texas_Best_Ice). For more details, visit SocialHouseFortWorth.com in the coming days. ( You can also help Turning Point make a difference with their True Texan Light Lager promotion by donating on Venmo to @gwd-qfac.)
Tarrant Area Food Bank is having quite an August. Along with some volunteer help from Gay for Good, the nonprofit is the beneficiary of the Seventh Annual Fort Worth Burger Week. From Mon to Sun next week, participating eateries will offer $7 specialty burgers to raise funds for the TAFB. Visit WhatsUpFortWorth.com/FW-Burger-Week.
and Travelin’ Tom’s Coffee trucks will be on-site with snacks and drinks for purchase, plus there will be complimentary cake for Orville Wright’s birthday. There is no cost to attend.
I asked myself, “What is 817 Day?,” then whispered, “Duh.” Combine the “8” for August and the “1-7” from the 17th, and you have our most notable area code. 817 Day has become a community-driven celebration of the city of Fort Worth, its culture, and identity. One business embracing this is
At 8pm, Big Laugh Comedy Club (604 Main St, Ste 100, Fort Worth, 817-80-7998) presents Comedians Against Humanity, a “comedy show for horrible people.” Cover is $10. This event is in the Funky Room (downstairs), but there’s also an upstairs stage called the Panther Room, plus Big Laugh hosts some shows at Ridglea Theater. For the full scoop, check out FortWorth.BLComedy.com.
By Jennifer Bovee

The Rev brings his trademark rockabilly/psychobilly to Tulips Thu.
Courtesy Reverend Horton Heat
“A comedy show for horrible people” is going on in the Funky Room at Big Laugh on Tue, Aug 19.




BACK TO SCHOOL
Dance Your Way Back to School This Fall
Promotional Feature
With back-to-school season here, it’s time to contemplate extracurricular activities like dance lessons. You and your kids are invited to come discover, experience, and express yourselves at Arts Fifth Avenue (1628 5th Av, Fort Worth, 817-923-9500), an eclectic neighborhood visual and performing arts center where you’ll find that “the arts are alive!”
A5A is proud to offer a wide range and variety of classes, workshops, and private lessons to students of all ages. The primary focus of our dance education is the celebrated American art form of Tap Dance, but they are also proud to offer classes and workshops in Art, Intro to Dance, Instrumental Music, Swing Dance, Voice, and Yoga, with options for Homeschoolers as well. Fall classes in the performing and visual arts for ages 4 to adult begin the week of Monday, September 8th.

Fall Class Schedule
Classes run September 8 through December 20, 2025, with the exception of Thanksgiving Break . The annual $20 registration fee is $20 per student and is non-refundable. (Note: All classes must have a minimum of five students to run.) For details about the various courses, go to ArtsFifthAvenue.org/ Classes.html and click the name of the class you’re interested in.
Take Us For a FREE Spin!
If you’ve ever wanted to try tap dancing, here’s your chance! You’re invited to join us for a complimentary Beginner Tap Class available on four dates this fall. From 1pm to 2pm on Saturday, September 6, October 4, November 1, or December 6, people ages 8 to adult can enjoy a FREE lesson. No tap shoes, no problem! We have shoes to loan for the class. To attend, reserve a space at ArtsFifthAvenue.org or call 817-923-9500.


Have you always wanted to try tap dancing? The time is now!
